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AXHOLME , an See also: island in the See also: north-west See also: part of See also: Lincolnshire, See also: England, lying between the See also: rivers Trent, Idle and See also: Don, and isolated by drainage channels connected with these rivers
.
It consists mainly of a See also: plateau of slight See also: elevation, rarely exceeding See also: loo ft., and comprises the parishes of Althorpe, Belton, Epworth, Haxey, Luddington, Owston and Crowle; the See also: total See also: area being about 47,goo acres
.
At a very early See also: period it would appear to have been covered with See also: forest; but this having been in See also: great measure destroyed, it became in -great part a swamp
.
In 1627 See also: King
See also: Charles I., who was
See also: lord of the island, entered into a contract with Cornelius Vermuyden, a Dutchman, for reclaiming the See also: meres and marshes, and rendering them See also: fit for tillage
.
This undertaking led to the introduction of a large number of Flemish workmen, who settled in the See also: district, and, in spite of the violent See also: measures adopted by the See also: English peasantry to expel them, retained their ground in sufficient numbers to affect the See also: physical appearance and the See also: accent of the inhabitants to .this See also: day
.
The See also: principal towns in the isle are Crowle (pop
.
2769) and Epworth
.
The Axholme joint See also: light railway runs north and See also: south through the isle, connecting See also: Goole with Haxey junction; and the Great See also: Northern, Great Eastern and Great Central lines also afford communications, The See also: land is extremely fertile
.
The name, properly Axeyholm (cf
.
Haxey)„js'hybrid, Ax being the See also: Celtic uisg, See also: water; ey the Anglo-Saxon for island; and holm the Norse word with the same signification
.
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